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Fun Furniture Fact #27: Danish Modern 101

Denmark is considered the happiest country in the world. While the list of reasons is long (dedication to workers’ rights, a rich history of art, Legos), we’d like to think their furniture is on that list. With the renewed popularity of mid century decor in recent years, you may find yourself wondering why so much furniture is marked “Danish” or “Danish Modern.”

              

The Danish Modern style of design began as early as the 1920s in Scandinavia, but it didn’t become visible on the global stage until after World War II. The style is typified by an emphasis on quality materials, sleek and novel shapes, and finding beauty in the clean and simplistic. These made Danish Modern designs perfectly suited to postwar prosperity and practicality.

One of the largest factors in Danish Modern’s international popularity was its role in the launch of the United Nations. In 1952, Danish designer Finn Juhl was chosen to decorate the Trusteeship Council Chamber in New York City’s new United Nations building. This important new international organization for the mid century era became a sort of showroom for a style unlike any most Americans had ever seen.

               

As Danish Modern swept the nation in the fifties, American companies started to produce their own versions of Danish Modern style furniture. While produced at high standards of quality and design, these American-made pieces are less expensive today than their Danish counterparts because they often incorporated more plastic and Formica, and lacked the prestige of an attached designer name. We currently have Danish Modern furniture in our store made everywhere from Norway to Canada to Israel, demonstrating the international design community’s embrace of this style as one of the most significant of the 20th century.

               

The popularity of Danish Modern design peaked in 1963, and in 1966 it began to steeply decline in popularity. With the recent resurgence of Mid Century Modern, it’s no surprise that the style’s cool European cousin is back as well. Here at Furnish Green, we have an ever-changing selection of Danish Modern furniture from a range of decades and countries of origin. Stop into our showroom or search “Danish Modern” on the website to stay up-to-date on this rich beloved style.

Fun Furniture Fact # 16: Art Deco

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The term art deco derives from the 1925 Exposition Internationale des Arts Decoratifs Industriels et Modernes, held in Paris. The show was organized by an association of French artists known as, La Societe des Artistes Decorateurs (society of decorator artists). – visual-arts-cork.com

This winter the Furnish Green showroom has been lush with some truly arresting Art Deco pieces. Naturally, the pieces populating our shop have propelled us to ponder some prevalent aspects of the Deco movement.

After its introduction in 1925 the Art Deco movement quickly rose to international prominence in a multitude of design mediums ranging from architecture to jewelry.
In regards to furniture, the Deco style features distinguishing characteristics that include the lines and shapes, wood inlays and veneer styles, and the hardware.

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Art Deco hardware design is a consistently dazzling detail. The variety of hardware designs for simple drawer pulls is remarkable. They range from minimal and industrial to lavishly ornate, but are unified by being based on this or that simple shape, thus meshing with the simple overall shape of the whole piece. This simplicity of shape serves as a stark contrast to the Art Nouveau movement which Deco succeeded. Hardware was made from newly available materials of the time including aluminum, stainless steel and often bakelite (an early form of plastic).

Much of the beauty of Art Deco furniture emanates from the wood itself. Many pieces feature veneers of burled wood grain or crotch walnut grain detail. These veneer types offer a more organic array of lines and shapes then the traditional hard parallel lines found in most wood grains. These ethereal shapes play against the hard angles and basic shapes that comprise the overall piece. Combined with the movement’s penchant for applying veneers symmetrically, the result is a mesmerizing Rorshach-like set of abstract reflections that one can get lost in (should it be one’s druthers).
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Our favorite Art Deco piece that resides in the showroom today is this amazing vanity with a full length mirror, an unexpected series of drawers in which shapes and sizes are determined by the uniquely asymmetrical cascading shape of the overall piece, and lastly but not leastly, THE ULTIMATE: a cute yet saucy built-in lamp!

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This vanity displays some classic Deco cut-out details on both the mirror frame and body of the piece (as shown above).

By the 1940s the movement started to fade, as it was deemed too ostentatious for wartime aesthetics.

One last note: during its heyday, the term Art Deco was seldom used. It wasn’t until 1968 when Bevis Hillier’s book Art Deco of the 20s and 30s that the term ‘Art Deco’ became commonly used.

Check out our entire Art Deco collection here.

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